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In reply to the discussion: Mom Demands School Go Peanut-Free For Allergic Child [View all]strategery blunder
(4,225 posts)I never said he was contagious, but when inhaling even a speck of peanut dust can send him into a deadly allergic reaction that can kill him before emergency services can react, he needs to be kept away from any trace of the stuff. Which basically means either quarantining the entire school so no allergens can ever enter (very impractical to say the least), or quarantining the kid within some designated allergen-free area within the school (a bit more practical, but very sad and this would serve no one's best interest).
As pmwmom said before I saw your reply, this kid does not need special ed services. He doesn't belong there, and to shoehorn him into that would likely do him a great disservice. What he needs is an epi-pen and the legal permission to carry it and use it if required in school--something he would have if he went to school in any of 45 other states. And yes, that Michigan is one of five holdouts does speak to the state legislature being "behind the times."